:
I call this meeting to order. This is meeting number nine of the Standing Committee on Finance.
I want to welcome our guests, who are appearing today pursuant to Standing Order 83.1 on our pre-budget consultations 2013.
We have one motion to deal with as a committee. I understand we are going to deal with it very quickly. It's a motion by Mr. Hoback.
Colleagues, we dealt with this in the last session. You should have it in front of you.
I'm going to go to Mr. Hoback very briefly, and then to Ms. Nash.
Mr. Hoback, please.
This is more of a formality, colleagues. I was under the impression that this would automatically come back into the committee, but with prorogation it was parked, so we have to bring it forward again.
I don't expect a lot of debate. It was passed quite easily before. You've heard the arguments for and against the need to do the study and what is involved in it. Nothing has changed, as far as that goes.
I think that's fair enough, Mr. Chair.
Can I call the vote, then?
(Motion agreed to [See Minutes of Proceedings])
The Chair: It's unanimous.
Thank you very much, colleagues, for dealing with this so quickly.
We'll now move back to our witnesses. Again, welcome to our committee meeting this morning regarding pre-budget consultations.
We have six people presenting. First of all, from the Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers, we have Mr. Alex Ferguson. We have the president of the Canadian Construction Association, Mr. Michael Atkinson. From the Canadian Manufacturers & Exporters we have Monsieur Martin Lavoie. From the Quebec Employers' Council, we have Ms. Norma Kozhaya. From Northam Brands Ltd., we have Jayson Columbus.
[Translation]
Finally, we have Julie Labrecque from the Regroupement des jeunes chambres de commerce du Québec.
Welcome to the committee.
[English]
You will each have a maximum of five minutes for an opening statement.
We'll begin with Mr. Ferguson, please.
:
Good morning, Mr. Chairman, and members of the committee.
As mentioned, my name is Alex Ferguson. I work with the Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers. As you probably know, our members collectively find and develop over 90% of Canada's petroleum resources.
Thank you for inviting us to participate in this panel on maximizing employment opportunities for Canadians. In our August submission to the committee, we provided comments and recommendations on increasing access to new export markets, continuing regulatory reforms, ensuring a competitive business tax structure, and promoting the growth of a Canadian skilled workforce. The supplementary brief we are providing today details how some of these recommendations can help maximize employment opportunities for Canadians. I will highlight a few of these in short comments this morning.
The upstream oil and gas sector is one of Canada's largest industries. Annual revenues total about $100 billion. The industry is Canada's largest private sector investor with over $60 billion a year spent on exploring and developing Canada's vast resources. About a quarter of the value of the shares traded on the TSX is related to oil and gas.
More than half a million Canadians are directly employed by this industry. While our success in contributing to national economic growth and generating jobs has been significant, we need to expand our horizons beyond our single export customer. Opportunities exist to tap into growing Asian markets for both oil and gas. Without access to these markets, Canada will be left behind while other countries take advantage.
We are blessed with an overabundance of supplies in this country and in North America, but if we can't get to new markets, we'll have let the opportunity for Canadian economic growth and job creation slip through our fingers.
The finance committee recognized the importance of diversifying Canada's export markets in its report last year. You recommended that “the federal government expeditiously encourage and support the development of infrastructure in relation to liquefied natural gas exports”.
The same sentiment is just as true for encouraging exports of our oil, of which we have the third largest reserves in the world to new markets. Opening new markets for Canadian oil and gas is key to helping maximize employment opportunities for Canadians. Once we know we have a growing market for our products, we need to ensure there is available investment capital and a skilled workforce to make that growth happen. Continuing to reduce investment uncertainty and increase the focus on balanced decision-making will help increase Canada's global competitiveness. The federal government can ensure the timely implementation of key regulatory initiatives, including regulations, and better implementation of the Species at Risk Act, the Fisheries Act, climate policy, and air quality initiatives.
The government also needs to ensure that the business tax structure is competitive and that investment capital is treated equitably across sectors. In particular, last year CAPP recommended that LNG, liquefied natural gas, export facilities be fairly recognized as manufacturing and processing for tax purposes. This remains our view.
Over the next decade this industry expects to create upwards of over 150,000 new direct jobs. This growth can't happen without the necessary skilled employees. In addition to the positive steps already taken in the Canada job grant program, the federal government can continue to strengthen essential skills development and training and education programs, tighten the link between post-secondary education and needed workforce skills, reduce the barriers that keep Canadians from being able to seek employment across the country in their area of expertise, and continue the EI system reforms that allow better links between employers and jobseekers.
Even with this Canadians first focus, Canada will need to rely on workforce supplies from abroad. Strengthened and clear programs both for permanent immigration and through a robust temporary foreign worker program are necessary for Canada to benefit from that talented labour available abroad.
These are my opening remarks on how to maximize employment opportunities for Canadians through gaining access to new markets, continuing regulatory reforms, ensuring a competitive business tax structure, and strengthening skills development, as well as through immigration and an effective, robust, temporary foreign worker program.
With that, Mr. Chairman and committee members, I look forward to your questions and an interesting discussion.
Thank you.
:
Mr. Chair, I wish to first of all thank the committee members for providing the Canadian Construction Association with the opportunity to appear before you in connection with your annual pre-budget consultations.
The Canadian Construction Association, as some of you know, represents some 20,000 member firms from coast to coast to coast in Canada, active in the non-residential sector of the construction industry. We build Canada's public infrastructure. We build many of Mr. Ferguson's members' facilities.
Since the theme for today's session is maximizing employment opportunities for Canadians, my comments will focus specifically on three recommendations we believe will help to achieve this goal. While I do not have a supplementary submission for you, I would be pleased to provide the committee with any follow-up information you may wish arising from my presentation.
As I said, our focus is on three specific measures. They are as follows: one, the need for a construction mobility tax credit; two, improvements and enhancements to the current federal apprenticeship job creation tax credit; and three, a change to the current capital allowance treatment of mobile diesel-powered construction equipment to better align depreciation rates with the useful service of the equipment and to bring such tax measures in line with those in the United States.
First of all, with respect to the mobility tax credit, while I appreciate there is a private member's bill before Parliament dealing with this matter currently, our approach to this issue is entirely non-partisan. We support the concept, and have supported the concept for several years now, regardless of the ultimate mechanism chosen by Parliament for its implementation.
Labour mobility is something that is critical to the construction industry, indeed critical to Mr. Ferguson's members' projects, which are often in very remote areas. Unlike the workforces of many other industries which are attached to a given location, the construction industry's workforce must be mobile in order to follow the work wherever it may be. If we have a mining project in northern British Columbia, we can't move the mine to downtown Toronto.
While it is true that employers will generally cover the expenses associated with sending their employees to relocate temporarily to work at distant or remote work sites, that is not the case for unemployed tradespeople seeking work in more hot markets than their home markets.
Construction workers are used to leaving their homes and families to work at distant sites for periods of time. A 2007 study conducted by the Construction Sector Council found that 70% of surveyed tradespeople travelled to find work at least once in their careers. Canada's Building Trades Unions have research that suggests the average mobile construction worker spends approximately $3,500 of his or her own money to temporarily relocate.
The sector council study I mentioned also found that the cost of temporary relocation is one of the biggest impediments to labour force mobility in the construction industry. We need a construction workforce that is mobile if we are going to meet the tremendous demand our industry is seeing from the resource-based sector, with some 600 resource-based projects to proceed in the next 10 years, worth over $650 billion, many of which are in remote parts of our country. For this reason, we are championing the concept of a mobility tax credit.
Second is the apprenticeship job creation tax credit. We applaud the federal government for the introduction of various support programs designed to encourage apprenticeship training across the country. I want to focus on the apprenticeship job creation tax credit, because it's really the only federal incentive for employers to actually engage apprentices, in this case first-year and second-year apprentices.
The apprenticeship job creation tax credit was lauded by our members when it was first introduced. We believed it would help incentivize smaller firms with fewer resources to become more directly engaged in apprenticeship training. The credit provides an employer incentive to hire first-year and second-year Red Seal trade apprentices through an annual non-refundable tax credit equal to a maximum of $2,000 of eligible salaries and wages per apprentice.
However, a 2007 Canada Revenue Agency ruling effectively removed any incentive by treating the tax credit as government assistance and wage subsidies and requiring it to be included in the taxpayer's income the following year. So if you take the tax credit one year, you have to bring that amount back in.
The Chair: You have one minute.
Mr. Michael Atkinson: Finally, I'll turn to capital cost allowances, CCAs. In Canada, class 38 purchases, which are basically mobile construction equipment, have a 30% declining balance, which means you can't effectively write off your machinery for almost 13 years.
What we'd like to see is an accelerated CCA for that equipment equivalent to what happens in the United States where they have a 25% straight line depreciation. We believe that would not only increase productivity enhancements by encouraging firms to buy newer equipment but also help the environment, because the new diesel-powered engines have better emission controls on them. We think it's a win-win across the board.
I will stop there, Mr. Chair. I look forward to questions.
Thank you.
:
Good morning, Mr. Chair and hon. members. Thank you for inviting my organization and I to discuss our priorities for the next federal budget. I will start my presentation in French and switch to English afterwards.
I represent Canadian Manufacturers & Exporters, Canada's largest business association. We represent almost 10,000 companies across the country. Our sector accounts for more than 88% of all Canadian exports and 75% of all research and development spending in the private sector in Canada.
Today, I will make six recommendations that can be grouped in four major categories.
The first category is support for research and development activities. Our first recommendation has to do with research and development tax credits that are not used by medium and large businesses in Canada. The scientific research and experimental development program provides large industrial companies with non-refundable tax credits that can be carried over to subsequent years while waiting for a more profitable outcome.
The 2,600 medium and large businesses that are using the tax credit have carried over almost $7 billion in unused tax credits since 2001. In keeping with the current government's intentions to make more direct investments in research and development for businesses, we recommend that a program be set up to exchange unused tax credits for government contributions and to support capital investment that is used for research and development purposes. Those contributions would therefore be an alternative to the complete elimination of capital expenditures for the scientific research and experimental development tax credits that were announced in budget 2012 and that will be in effect starting next year.
The second recommendation has to do with the direct funding for research and development. We strongly support the creation of the support fund for the advanced manufacturing sector in southern Ontario. We firmly believe that all the other regional economic development organizations in the country should adopt similar programs for the advanced manufacturing sector.
[English]
Our next recommendation is about large-scale capital investment attraction. CME suggests the creation of a national fund to boost new investments in capital for the manufacturing sector. This new capital investment fund would target projects that would demonstrate an ability to increase manufacturing and processing output in Canada.
The sorts of projects that could be eligible for such direct funding would include the building of new production facilities, the expansion of current facilities, revamping existing operations, or the upgrading of machinery and equipment,
Our fourth recommendation is related to machines and equipment. It's something that my colleagues have talked about.
The accelerated capital cost allowance for machinery and equipment has been in place since 2007, and is set to expire in 2015. We strongly recommend that the ACCA become a permanent feature of the Canadian tax system, recognizing the importance of capital expenditures for the future of our sector and for increased productivity in the Canadian economy.
We also strongly encourage the federal government to review all the classes of assets and to align them with the U.S. depreciation rules in order to provide a level playing field in the fiscal treatment of business investments.
Our next recommendation is with respect to commercialization of new products in Canada. We recommend the adoption of a patent box model. A patent box is a tax incentive that provides relief from corporate tax on income generated from certain types of qualifying intellectual property, such as patents. Relief can be given as a reduced tax rate on revenues generated by the sales of products that were invented and commercialized in Canada. Countries such as the United Kingdom, Belgium, and the Netherlands have already implemented similar systems successfully.
The Chair: You have one minute left.
Mr. Martin Lavoie: Okay.
Our last recommendation is with respect to the new upcoming infrastructure fund, the building Canada plan. This program will transfer $47 billion over the next 10 years to provinces and municipalities for their infrastructure projects.
We urge the federal government to maximize the benefits of these projects for the Canadian manufacturing sector and job creation while respecting our international trade obligations. Recently our organization sent a letter to the infrastructure minister to raise the importance of using the building Canada plan in order to provide a level playing field for Canadian manufacturers.
As you know, Canada has one of the most open procurement regimes in the world, and yet our trade partners keep imposing trade barriers that force our companies to delocalize their production in these countries in order to bid on projects, especially infrastructure projects.
We strongly suggest that the federal government adopt a reciprocity policy that would be implemented in the funding agreements under the building Canada plan which—
The Quebec Employers Council would like to thank the Standing Committee on Finance for the opportunity to present its comments on the theme “Maximize job creation in consideration of the 2014-2015 federal budget preparations”.
The maximizing of jobs is, of course, predicated on the presence of competitive companies that have a favourable tax and regulatory environment. It also hinges on market innovation and openness. Equally important as the maximizing of job creation, matching available job skills and companies' needs is an essential element in raising productivity. And labour costs, including all of the mandatory contributions that add to salaries, have to be competitive.
I will start by talking about the last item, that is payroll contributions. Increasing the tax load on payrolls for employers puts the brakes on investments and job creation. In this area, the Employers Council has serious reservations about the various proposals to enhance public pension plans, meaning the Canada pension plan and the Quebec pension plan.
It is worth noting that, internationally, Canada ranks quite well in terms of retirement savings. This does not obscure the interest in promoting savings, but there isn't a generalized need. Cookie-cutter solutions such as the ones being proposed do not respond to the needs. On the contrary, this runs the risk of having adverse effects on economic activity, investments, jobs and salaries in particular. Moreover, such enhancements don't encourage the extending of an active life, an objective we should pursue.
In terms of employment insurance, which is another payroll program, we are proposing the introduction of an employment insurance credit for training expenses, which would also improve productivity and help in maintaining and creating jobs.
I would like to briefly turn to the proposal for the Canada job grant. The Employers Council hails the intention of the federal government to have more employer input by striving to have a better matching of skills training to their needs. However, we are wondering whether a more favourable course of action would be to negotiate a new agreement with the provinces so that each province remains in charge of their respective programs. The federal government could still set the national guidelines and objectives.
The area of regulations is also an important aspect to look at. Of course, businesses appreciate the continued implementation of measures designed to reduce the regulatory burden and applaud the government's desire to establish the one-for-one rule in terms of regulations. In this area, we feel that the new regulations the government plans to implement in transportation, financial services and telecommunications should adhere to the same one-for-one principle.
Quebec employers are elated by the signing of the Canada-European Union Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement. This agreement should come into effect in about two years' time. To maximize the benefits, we suggest taking advantage of this two-year interim to better prepare our businesses through training and information, so that they are able to effectively seize the new opportunities that will arise. The Quebec Employers Council offers its collaboration in this regard.
Investment in our transportation infrastructure continues to be a major concern in terms of ensuring optimal mobility of goods and people. We suggest that the government move ahead, without further delay, with its plans to replace the Champlain Bridge and that it promote the sustainable development of our natural resources in compliance with environmental and safety standards.
Finally, the Quebec Employers Council believes that only sound public finances will allow the government to maintain competitive tax rates and to encourage prosperity and job creation. We urge the government to continue its efforts to eliminate the deficit.
We therefore also encourage the government to introduce the balanced budget bill.
Thank you.
:
Thank you, Mr. Chair, and members of the committee.
My recommendation today concerns federal excise rules that pertain to domestic production of apple ciders in Canada and their impact on employment, the cider beverage producers, and cider apple orchardists.
In B.C., orchardists supply apple wine as a key ingredient for authentic ciders. Producers buy bulk apple wine and use it for final packaging for consumer cider sale.
I'll provide some background on the industry, our company, and the issue at hand.
In Canada, the national retail cider category is valued at $140 million, according to the Association of Canadian Distillers, and has experienced explosive growth at 24% in the last year alone. Canadian-produced brands currently represent 63% of the market and are growing at 18% per year, slower than market growth. Import brands account for 37% of the market and lead growth at 36% per year, capturing increasing market share.
This trend is a concern for us as domestic cider producers. The cider market alone in B.C. is valued at $62 million and over 44% of the national market, making B.C. a very important contributor to national cider production.
Our group, Northam, is one of western Canada's fastest growing beverage makers in three business segments: cider, beer, and ready-to-drink beverages, such as coolers. We are ranked the fifth largest domestic cider producer nationally and we are 100% B.C. owned.
Here are some facts on the excise treatment for cider. Apple wine is a base ingredient for authentic apple cider and is regulated by wine excise rules. Cider is excise free if the agricultural content is 100% Canadian. Cider attracts 29.5¢ per litre of excise duty on finished product if ingredients in any amount are not in compliance with Canadian content rules.
We understand that the Canadian content rule for excise-free status is to assist Canadian orchards to develop and produce products in a cost-competitive manner and to compete domestically with foreign imports and stimulate Canadian business growth and employment.
We believe there is an industry issue for cider producers in B.C., and perhaps in all of Canada. We are losing ground to foreign imports primarily due to some flavour attributes of domestic industry products, an issue that can easily be corrected. To be competitive with imports, it is imperative that an authentic cider have a key ingredient, apple concentrate, that is required for mouth feel and olfactory attributes on the back of the palate.
The Canadian food and drug regulations list apple cider concentrate as the second ingredient allowable for cider, but as yet there are no reliable sources of Canadian apple concentrate. We therefore resort to using manufactured flavourings to compete with imports. We assert that only small amounts of apple concentrate are necessary for quality authentic cider to compete with foreign ciders and level the playing field.
Our recommendation is for a temporary relaxation of excise rules to allow cider producers to use a small percentage of imported apple concentrate while the industry works with Canadian producers to adapt and supply a reliable source of 100% Canadian content concentrate where no supply currently exists in Canada.
We request a staged approach to the relaxation of excise rules over a period of 10 years to allow small amounts of foreign concentrate into the final blend of finished ciders before final consumer packaging. For absolute clarity, foreign concentrate would not be allowed for the additional fermentation and alcohol production.
Over the first four years, we request an allowance of 5% foreign concentrate content; for the next three years, 2.5% foreign content; and for the final two years, to allow 1% of foreign concentrate content. Then afterward the 100% Canadian content rule can continue to apply.
We believe that Canadian jobs and the economy in the sector are at risk. If we do not allow the industry to adapt, there could be unfavourable consequences. There could be a loss of Canadian jobs in both the beverage and agricultural sectors, including a potential reduction in orchards. The domestic industry could produce an inferior product and continue to lose ground to foreign companies. Domestic industry producers could adapt by sourcing 100% foreign ingredients and pay excise, at the cost of Canadian agricultural jobs. There could be lower Canadian business income and tax base for Canada.
In closing, I would like to thank you, Mr. Chair, and committee members, for the opportunity to present today.
Thank you.
:
Good morning. My name is Julie Labrecque, and I am here on behalf of Regroupement des jeunes chambres de commerce du Québec.
Mr. Chair, distinguished committee members and MPs, I want to begin by thanking your for inviting us to appear today and allowing us to share our recommendations for the next budget.
For over 20 years, Regroupement des jeunes chambres de commerce du Québec has represented 35 junior chambers of commerce across Quebec, comprising more than 8,000 young entrepreneurs, business people and independent workers.
Today, we would like to make three recommendations to the committee.
Our first recommendation is the inclusion of measures that support intergenerational equity in the next budget. We applaud the benefits granted to previous generations, but we believe it is now time to focus on balancing the budget, thereby protecting the future of the next generations. To that end, we would welcome measures aimed at boosting long-term investor confidence among young entrepreneurs. In addition, we would support a plan designed to return to a balanced budget and eliminate the national debt; we would also be eager to take part in the consultations leading to such a plan.
As for our second recommendation, some of you may already be familiar with our access to entrepreneurship plan or RAE. We want to see a measure that facilitates the transfer of Canadian businesses, to avoid, at all costs, their being sold or shut down when the time comes for them to change hands. We don't want them to end up in foreign hands. We want Canadian companies to stay Canadian, and we support giving young entrepreneurs access to business opportunities.
RAE is a bit like the federal home buyers' plan. The measure we are proposing would introduce a third dimension. We want young entrepreneurs to have the ability to use money from their RRSP to buy a business without incurring a tax penalty. We firmly believe in this program and are open to exploring the idea with the government, to determine how the plan should be drawn up and implemented, and what its parameters should be. The main purpose of the access to entrepreneurship program is to retain Canadian businesses and jobs, giving them an injection of youth, in order to preserve Canadian innovations.
As you know, 98% of Canadian businesses are SMEs, employing 48% of Canada's workforce. It is therefore critical to ensure that Canadian businesses remain in Canada, in the hands of Canada's young entrepreneurs. That is why we want to see an access to entrepreneurship plan in the next budget.
Our third recommendation has to do with maintaining the Canada job grant. Regroupement des jeunes chambres de commerce views the continuation of the grant program as essential. To the extent possible, agreements with the provinces need to be renewed, especially with Quebec.
With respect to the grant's continuation, we commend the government's desire to work more closely with employers. However, we believe that Quebec is doing an excellent job of managing the program. It is our position that clear objectives and parameters will have to be set to ensure the program is implemented effectively. The Canada job grant is aimed at benefiting participating employers and adding value to Canada's economy.
In conclusion, Mr. Chair, we believe that intergenerational equity should be an integral part of the budget. Regroupement des jeunes chambres de commerce du Québec has taken steps to ensure that young people sit on the boards of directors of Quebec's crown corporations. In that vein, we also believe the next budget should contain a measure requiring every crown corporation to have at least one young person on its board of directors to facilitate business renewal.
:
Thank you for that question, Ms. Nash.
I hope I'm not part of a dying industry. I don't want to have to flip burgers in a few years.
There's no denying the fact that our sector was especially hard hit by the global economic crisis and the financial meltdown. Most sectors are now back to pre-recession levels. Ours is a sector that is undergoing transformation, but certainly not one that is dying. Instead, I would say it's in a period of technological change.
The strength of our sector's economy does not lie so much in its share of the GDP, although it does account for 14%. It isn't the sector with the largest share, however, when you compare it with the service industry. As I said in my opening remarks, the manufacturing sector produces 88% of Canada's exports and is responsible for 75% of R&D spending. So, for all of our sakes, I hope it isn't a dying sector. Nevertheless, I can reassure you that it isn't. We're actually seeing advanced manufacturing sectors emerging, particularly in western countries.
Advanced manufacturing relies much more heavily on new technologies. And these new technologies are focused on innovative manufacturing processes.
:
To clarify, we're actually saying there should be direct investment to attract capital investment.
We know that most of the large multinationals have plans to increase production capacities, or build new labs for new technological developments. They're waiting to see how the world economy is going to do. If we want Canada to be on the map to attract those investments, maybe we need to put together that national fund.
Some of the provinces already have these funds. I know that Investissement Québec, for example, is a very popular program for companies looking for new investments in Canada. I think the federal level maybe should have one that could even be matched by the provincial funds that currently exist.
Thank you to the witnesses for being here this morning.
I come from Saskatchewan where the labour shortage is just huge. The unemployment rate is 3.6%. We're screaming for skilled and unskilled workers. We're doing everything we can to include our aboriginal communities. We're looking behind every door to find people just to fill the jobs there.
Mr. Ferguson, I know we've talked about temporary foreign worker programs and stuff like that, but I guess the question I have for you is this. Are the types of jobs you're seeing created in your industry temporary in nature, or are they full-time, long-term jobs that will make for good careers?
:
I'd like to thank the witnesses for being here today.
Mr. Atkinson, I want to echo your comments. Being a representative from Cape Breton, we've always had a large pool of skilled tradespeople who have worked on some of the biggest projects around the world, so mobility obviously is a big issue.
Going back to the apprenticeship stuff, we know that not even 50% of apprentices who begin programs complete those programs. In the initial investment on the tax credit program for apprenticeships, the government put in about $150 million, and they never used all of it. It had never been exhausted, and they have cut it back by about a third over the last couple of years.
We know that when surveyed the apprentices who would benefit from that tax credit, 90% of them said—and this is the government's own stats on it—they would have entered into the apprenticeship regardless of whether or not there was an incentive.
Is it the best vehicle to support apprentices, and is it the best vehicle to help with success with regard to pulling apprentices over?
Mr. Ferguson may want to comment on that too.
:
Very quickly, on the completion ratios and rates, one of the concerns we have had is the way incompletions are counted. Unless they have rectified this, if I start my apprenticeship in Ontario and move to Alberta, I'm incomplete in Ontario even though I may succeed in Alberta.
Also, if my apprenticeship training leads to another position or occupation where I don't have to get the journeyperson status, for example, when building a refinery one of Mr. Ferguson's members employs me to work in that refinery and I don't need my ticket, if you will, I'm again considered incomplete even though my apprenticeship training has led to my being gainfully employed in an occupation I've been trained for.
I think the first question I would have is, are completion rates the correct benchmark for success for apprenticeship training? That's a question I have which I don't have an answer for, but I'd love to see an examination. That's number one.
Number two, I think the incentive grants have been helpful to apprentices; there's no question about it. My concern, however, is the incentive for employers to engage first-year and second-year apprentices through the apprenticeship job creation tax credit, as the incentive was gutted by the CRA ruling. I don't blame the CRA. They just said that's the way the thing was designed, hence this is the way we have to act.
My last point on that, is it's limited to Red Seal trades only. While Red Seal trades are important, there are a lot of trades that aren't Red Seal that are provincially recognized.
:
That's fantastic, Mr. Chair. Thank you very much.
I don't run out of things to talk about when it comes to jobs. Jobs are very important.
I want to get back to the oil industry, in particular. I go back and forth between Fort McMurray just about every weekend. There are three direct flights a day from Toronto. They are coming from St. John's. They are coming from Cape Breton. I was surprised not to hear Rodger talk about his time playing hockey in Fort McMurray, and all the jobs there, and all his relatives and constituents who go up there now, because I know that all Canadians are certainly benefiting from this.
I want to talk about the other options we have to grow our economy through federal regulations and through what the finance committee can recommend, especially regarding the pipeline constraint for oil, because that's very important. I know what's going on with LNG. Right now we get about $3.00 to $3.20 for liquid natural gas. In Asia they're getting $12 to $14, but because we have no pipeline going to the west coast and no LNG facility, we can't take advantage of that. We're getting stifled there by about 300% to 400%, and we're doing the same thing with our oil.
It seems bizarre that because we don't have pipeline capacity, the oil sands companies and oil companies generally are spending $11 per barrel to ship oil on rail, which is 10 times more expensive than pipeline capacity, at least 10 times more, and to put it bluntly, who pays for that? Consumers do.
Let's talk about how we can we keep the economy growing, how we can keep employees going, and how we can create a better distribution network.
I am going to ask Mr. Lavoie, Ms. Kozhaya and Ms. Labrecque all the same question.
As you know, Bill , which we will begin studying next week, contains a government measure to eliminate the tax credit for labour-sponsored venture capital funds. The measure is especially relevant for Quebec, since 90% of the tax credit goes to Quebec funds.
Where do your respective organizations stand on the subject? In your view, how important are labour-sponsored venture capital funds to Quebec's economy? What do you recommend as far as this measure is concerned?
:
I would like all three of you to comment on what I say next.
I'm not sure whether you know or not, but in late October, Quebec's two main labour funds, Fondaction and Fonds de solidarité FTQ, brought a proposal to the finance minister; it called for the continuation of the tax credit and addressed the federal government's concerns, including cutting the cost of the tax credit by reducing it by a third. That would mean a cap on how many new shares the two labour funds could issue.
Under the proposal, the two main funds would invest $550 million in private funds in Quebec, with the option of investing anywhere in Canada, not just in Quebec. A total of $400 million would be directly invested in private funds outside Quebec, including $120 million in the federal government's venture capital action plan. And just over $1 billion would be invested directly in companies, in addition to the funds' investments in the venture capital action plan.
That was what the two labour funds put forward in a proposal totalling $2 billion over 10 years, in exchange for the tax credit, which would end up costing somewhere between $80 million and $90 million a year. The federal government rejected the proposal, sticking to its decision, whereby it will spend $400 million in one fell swoop and that will be the end of it. What do you think of that proposal? How should the federal government have responded?
Ms. Kozhaya, you can start us off.
I thank our witnesses for being here today.
My first question is for Madame Labrecque,
[Translation]
from Regroupement des jeunes chambres de commerce du Québec.
[English]
Madame Labrecque, in your submission, you argue that the government should wipe out the budget deficit quickly and work on implementing a debt repayment plan. You sound like a natural Conservative. I appreciate that.
As you may know, our government did in fact repay $38 billion of the national debt in our first two years in government. We now have the lowest net debt to GDP in the G-7, by far.
Since the time of your submission, the government has announced steps forward on both of these issues. Our government set an ambitious debt-to-GDP target of 25% by 2021. Also, I would like you to know that in the economic and fiscal update, we're on track to balance the budget in 2015.
I'm interested in knowing how important this is for young people in Quebec and across Canada.
My next question is for Ms. Kozhaya, of the Quebec Employers Council.
[English]
In your opening remarks, you mentioned how raising the CPP at this time would be difficult for employers. Obviously, we all want to have a strong retirement plan for Canadians; however, unlike the official opposition, we don't think this is the right time to put an extra burden on employers and employees by imposing an increased premium on the CPP.
Can you please explain how it is important that we should not be doing this at this time?
:
Thank you for the question.
Indeed, we see them as levies on the economy. In the short term, an impact will certainly be felt. It's already clear that the economic recovery is very slow, not just in Canada, but also everywhere else, including the United States, Europe and emerging countries, which we may have relied on a bit more in the past.
Those levies will add up and deter job creation. In the long term, however, benefits could flow.
There is also a focus on encouraging savings, but is this the only way to do that? Efforts have been made in the past, including the federal government's pooled registered pension plan and Quebec's voluntary retirement savings plan. Time will tell whether those plans prove successful.
As I also said in my opening remarks, the need for retirement savings isn't generalized. A number of studies have shown that. This certainly won't help low-income earners meet their retirement needs. I don't think it is meant to help the rich either. If you examine the measures designed to help the households who may need them, you're looking at about 30% of households, not 100%. We don't need a universal solution because the need isn't universal.
What Mr. Saxton failed to mention about the deficit is that it was artificially created. We have to take a very long and pointless detour before we achieve some semblance of a balanced budget again.
I'm going to stay on the topic of the deficit.
Mr. Atkinson, the Federation of Canadian Municipalities said there was still a major shortfall in terms of infrastructure across the country. We're talking nearly $150 billion. The federal government has responsibilities and some jurisdiction in the area of infrastructure. The Parliamentary Budget Officer determined that, as far as federal funding allocated to investment programs was concerned, some $4 billion had not been spent. So the much talked about program valued at $170 billion over 10 years is partly funded by recycled money.
The federal government has not taken the necessary steps to improve infrastructure or help municipalities. Would you care to comment on that?
:
Like the FCM, our position would be that governments plural are not doing what we need to do to ensure our critical public infrastructure supports Canada's economic growth, prosperity, etc., because custodianship of critical public infrastructure in Canada is primarily at the municipal level now. Municipalities are the front-line gatekeepers, if you will; provincial governments have an extremely important role, and the federal government has a role.
From our perspective the 10-year program was a step in the right direction, as was the seven-year building Canada plan, because for the first time in Canada we had a multi-year plan that provided some permanency, some reliability. That's so important in planning, both for municipal and provincial governments, but also for our industry that has to build this. We have taken positive steps, and when I say “we” I say all levels of government have taken positive steps to address our infrastructure deficits. There's more to do. There's more work we have to do, and we have to find a way because there is no option. It's not either/or; we must address our critical public infrastructure needs, no question.
When it comes to the dollars, what's spent, etc., what's the right number, what's the appropriate share, if you will, of responsibility among governments, the one thing I can say is that it's a co-shared responsibility. All levels of government have a role to play in dealing with this issue.
:
Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
Welcome to our witnesses. I have several questions.
I can't help but state at the beginning, with respect to Mr. Côté's comment on balancing the budget, that quite frankly, if your party would have had your way, our deficit would be a lot higher than it is today. Maybe I'd just set the record straight there.
I have a question for Mr. Columbus. Jayson, I'm puzzled because you're telling me there's no manufacturer of Canadian apple juice concentrate.
:
If there is an excise tax on that, it's something I think we could certainly look at. I think you need a little more explanation and little more depth to your request when you put it to us.
The other area I want to go into is with Mr. Atkinson. I want to specifically talk about the apprenticeship training. There are some very similar comments coming from all of our witnesses here today. As a member of this committee I certainly appreciate that, because it tells us there are some areas where we need to improve and there are some concerns coming from across the country, from various and related groups, that are similar.
On the apprenticeship training, you talk about the fact that we were forced to make the apprenticeship dollars, $1,000 per apprentice, taxable, but you don't explain that it's not taxable for the full amount. Did I get that wrong?
Welcome to all of our witnesses. Bienvenue.
I want to pose a couple of questions to Mr. Ferguson of the Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers.
About a year ago now, I ran in a byelection in Victoria. I suppose the principal plank of my platform was an opposition to the Enbridge northern gateway project, for which I found literally zero support in our community.
My question is directed at you.
I was at a rally in Vancouver at which there were a couple of thousand people last weekend. It was one of 130 rallies across the country opposing this project among others. One thing that someone said struck me as poignant. They said, "The cabinet may give the permits, but the population gives the permission."
My question for you is, if Enbridge were to continue in the face of opposition by both non-aboriginal and aboriginal Canadians, would CAPP support that position, if they got the permit from the regulator?
:
I certainly don't see it in my part of the world; I assure you.
In your brief you say, “Bills and work to improve regulatory efficiency” and “responsible environmental” performance.
Those were the bills that gutted the Fisheries Act and repealed the Canadian Environmental Assessment Act and replaced it with a very pale imitation of the statute that was repealed.
What are you proposing when you say that the full benefits require “effective and efficient...regulations and policy” that are “implemented on an aligned 'whole of government' and timely basis”?
Can you explain what you mean by that?
:
Thank you all for coming this morning. I'm so glad I got the final questions.
You know you're getting old when you start to refer to the younger generation, and I do that often. Sometimes I lament, as most older people do; they think things were so much better....
But I have to tell you, my spirits have been revived. I see a phoenix rising from the ashes when I see the young people here today. I hear what they're saying.
I mean this with all sincerity, when I see your passion and the vision that you have, because I believe it's absolutely correct.
I'm going to be fair. Forgive me, gentlemen, but I want to focus on the four here this morning.
Maybe I'll go through a few of the policies. We know already that you support the elimination of our deficit. I'm hearing from you that we need to start to chip away at or pay down our national debt.
Regarding the lowering of corporate taxes, do you all agree that this is...?
I'm seeing nods. Could I just hear “Amen” or “Yes, sir”, or something along those lines from each one of you?
Would you agree, Martin, that the lowering of corporate tax is on the correct path?
I'm going to go out on a limb. I want to ask you, and you can be honest, but please don't take too much time, because there's another question that I also want to introduce, are there areas in which we are moving in the wrong direction?
It's not a loaded question. Hit me. We need to know if there are things that you think are incorrect. Speak to me as young people with your whole lives ahead of you, your future ahead of you.
Julie, perhaps I could start with you.
[English]
I'm sorry, I know members have more questions, but we are going to have to cut it there.
Merci beaucoup à tous.
Thank you so much for your presentations and for participating in the pre-budget consultations.
Colleagues, I will suspend for a couple of minutes and we'll bring the next panel forward.
If you could just review the budget request you have before you, hopefully we can deal with that today.
Thank you.
:
Thank you. I'll share that credit with our committee staff. They've done an excellent job.
Are all in favour of this budget proposed by Mr. Jean?
(Motion agreed to [See Minutes of Proceedings])
The Chair: I want to welcome our guests to our second panel. Thank you so much for being with us today.
We have six presenters on this panel. We have from the Canadian Energy Pipeline Association, the president and CEO, Brenda Kenny. From the Canadian Labour Congress, we have the senior economist, Angella MacEwen. From the Canadian Restaurant and Foodservices Association, we have the president and CEO, Mr. Garth Whyte. We have from l'Institut de recherche et d'informations socioéconomiques, professeur Éric Pineault. From Unifor, we have economist Jim Stanford back with the committee. From the United Steelworkers, we have their economist, Mr. Erin Weir.
Welcome. Thank you so much for being with us. You have five minutes maximum for an opening statement, and then we'll have questions from members. We will begin with Ms. Kenny, please.
:
Good morning members of the committee, Mr. Chairman.
My name is Brenda Kenny. I am president and CEO of Canadian Energy Pipeline Association. We look forward to the opportunity to provide our views on the 2014 budget.
As you probably know, we represent all the large transmission pipeline companies in Canada. Together they ship about 97% of all of Canada's daily onshore crude oil and natural gas production, and meet the needs of consumers in that fashion every day.
Our membership currently operates more than 115,000 km of pipelines in North America. We are big job creators on the cusp of investing more than $25 billion on nationally significant projects and we recommend that the federal government support pipeline technology research and collaboration across Canada. This would support continuous improvement on pipeline safety and security while also improving social licence to operate, reaching needed new markets, but also very importantly positioning Canada as a world leader in engineering research, development, and deployment.
Federal support for collaboration would be defined as a modest contribution comprised of two things: first, sufficient capacity within a key department such as Natural Resources Canada, through which the federal government could participate in collaborative efforts; second, funding of up to $5 million for three to five years to establish investments in technology and collaboration, perhaps through a CANMET energy program.
The economic benefits of increased pipeline infrastructure are clear. Salaries and benefits support thousands of families, local businesses, and many regional economies from coast to coast to coast. Last Friday we released an economic evaluation that showed direct employment across the country of over 9,000 people. Our members for, operating systems alone, pay over $1 billion a year in taxes. We also benefit thousands of local suppliers, welding, steel manufacturing, construction, information technology, even hotels, restaurants, and banking. They are all impacted by the pipeline industry, and we have a golden opportunity to broaden that long-term trade.
Infrastructure delays are estimated to cost this country $30 million to $70 million a year. The Canadian Chamber of Commerce calculates that $18 billion a year is lost and the overall market differential would cost Canada $135 trillion in the coming years. Of course, safety is job one, and we in our industry have committed to strive to zero incidents through design, constructing, operating, etc.
One of the most significant ways in which we improve safety is through deployment of advanced technologies. Collaboration is key. To really break the back and get a step change, we need to find better ways to collaborate. We have established the CEPA Foundation, which is the means through which suppliers and contractors across industry come together.
We've also been working with others on something called the Canadian Pipeline Technology Collaborative,which is a pan-Canadian approach to leverage and optimize R and D. This is similar to what Australia has done. It focuses on a number of core areas that are outlined in our letter to the committee. Actions on these objectives are critical through a tri-sector approach that includes governments, the research community, and industry, resulting in safety and new jobs through new high-tech firms.
Fundamentally, there is a number of key examples also outlined in the document provided to the committee. This complements our sophisticated risk management approach through the CEPA integrity first risk management program. The federal government's involvement is critical. We need to have capacity from the federal government to be engaged in collaboration and support for matched commitments to come. This supportive collaboration is an important part of Canada's golden opportunity in opening and securing new markets while meeting Canadians' public interest priorities respecting safety and environmental protection.
Thank you.
:
On behalf of the 3.3 million members of the Canadian Labour Congress, we want to thank you for the opportunity to present our views. The CLC brings together workers from virtually all sectors of the Canadian economy in all occupations and in all parts of Canada.
Leading economists, including bank economists, say that Canada's economic growth prospects remain weak due to insufficient business investment, high household debt, and weak global growth. Leading economists also fail to see any sign of labour shortages emerging. Some even suggest we should welcome the eventual tightening of the labour markets that will come when boomers retire.
Business investments are not where they should be. The across-the-board corporate tax cuts did not deliver the promised investments in real assets, such as new factories, or in workers' training. Thus these cuts failed to boost economic growth and productivity and did not help to create more and better jobs.
The overall labour force participation rate and the employment rate have not recovered to their pre-recession levels. Employment growth has been shallower than labour force growth, and the labour force participation rate is at its lowest level in 10 years. The participation and employment rates for 20- to 35-year-olds is markedly lower than pre-recession, indicating there's a difficulty for young workers to break into the labour market. On the other hand, employment rates have increased throughout the recession and recovery for people over 55.
Programs targeted at helping young workers get experience in the job market and information that helps them choose training for in-demand careers are both critical components of addressing this pressing issue. Second chance retraining opportunities for older workers affected by structural shifts in the economy are also important.
We're concerned about the rise in precarious labour, part of a much longer-term trend. For example, two million workers are employed in temporary jobs in Canada right now, which is about 13.5% of all employees, up from about 12% just before the recession.
Underemployment is also an issue that we're looking at closely. For the year between November 2012 and October 2013, an average of 1.35 million workers were unemployed. Some 900,000 workers worked part-time but wanted full-time work. That represents 27% of all part-time workers. Some 472,000 people were not in the labour force, but indicated to Statistics Canada that they did want work. These are marginally attached workers and they're an indication of how many people may be looking to enter the labour market should labour market prospects improve. Statistics Canada tells us that there are 6.4 unemployed persons per job vacancy in Canada, but that number doubles when we consider these marginally attached and underemployed workers.
The proportion of unemployed workers who remain unemployed for long stretches is also higher than pre-recession, with 20% of unemployed workers having been unemployed for more than 27 weeks, and 7% unemployed for more than a year. This is compared to pre-recession levels of 13% and 4%. All of this is to say that the labour market is weaker than the headline unemployment rate of 6.9% would indicate.
A recent TD Economics report by Derek Burleton and his colleagues found there are no wage pressures in high-demand occupations. In Saskatchewan, wages for in-demand occupations are actually growing at a slower rate than the provincial average. This evidence supports the position that before the government intervenes in labour markets, either to provide easy access to migrant works or to subsidize employer training costs, you ensure employers have “more skin in the game”, as employment aptly expressed. To properly assess the presence of actual labour shortages, we need better labour market information.
The CLC urges the government to take seriously the need for timely, reliable, and detailed labour market information as part of a broader investment in improving Canada's labour market productivity.
Is the time up?
The CLC also calls for the development of a national tripartite skills development strategy to prepare for the consequences of the aging workforce and to meet the specific needs of groups such as aboriginals, recent immigrants, and youth.
Training and lifelong learning are critical, and literacy and numeracy skills in Canada lag behind many other countries. LMA, labour market agreement, funding has been key to supporting this goal. We know that 86% of LMA clients are employed after participating in an LMA program and earn an average of $332 more a week. LMAs also have proven track records of reaching vulnerable and marginalized populations. For example, the CBC reports that in Saskatchewan, 60% of LMA beneficiaries were aboriginal persons and many of them lived in areas where new economic projects were planned.
Thank you.
:
Thank you, Mr. Chair, and thank you to the committee for inviting us to speak to you today.
We note that this committee is looking at six issues: economic growth, vulnerable Canadians, R and D, rural issues, urban issues, and red tape. We could be in every one of those committees.
Today we're going to talk about maximizing employment opportunities for Canadians. I have a powerpoint presentation, which is not on a powerpoint, but I have a deck here that I'll be referring to.
If there's an overall key message I would like to leave with the committee today it's that the restaurant industry will continue to play a significant role in job creation across Canada, especially with youth, first-time jobs, as well as skilled jobs.
If I may turn to the next page, I don't know if some of you saw this several years back, but it was a United Way campaign. It was a good campaign in what they were trying to do, but you can see here they had a new Canadian working in a dungeon. It was obviously not a very good job, and he needed to get out of that job into a nurse's position.
I started in my position months before this ad went out. I showed this to my board. My board has 30 members—which is a lot, and we can talk about that later—with everyone from CEOs of multinational corporations to chefs for fine dining to independent restaurateurs, and to a person they were angry and hurt. Many of them, including CEOs of multi-billion dollar corporations, started as dishwashers. Many of them have their kids starting as dishwashers. It became apparent that if we don't tell our story, other people will tell it for us and this is the story they're going to tell.
I'd like to move to the second page, which is the United Way campaign three years later. It shows a builder of careers, of jobs, of communities, builders in urban and rural settings in every community. As an organization and as a sector, whether we're talking about agrifood, health, tourism, or economic development, we're positioning ourselves, and you should see us as part of the solution, not part of the problem.
As we talk about employment we move to the next slide, what is called an infograph. We have 18 million Canadians visit us every day. We give back almost $300 million to the community. We support 1.1 million jobs and we support $250,000 indirect jobs in agrifood primarily. It says $65 billion, but we're a $69 billion industry.
We are the number one creator of first-time jobs. We hire underprivileged people, people from the aboriginal community, seniors. We hire from all categories. We'll take them all. We are the number two creator of jobs for youth. These jobs are across Canada.
The next page refers to a labour force survey and Statistics Canada information. We looked at sectors and put it together. You may remember 2009 and 2010. We are a reflection of consumers; if they are uncertain we feel it. Even during those times we continued to create jobs. We were the third largest job creator. The others were a mix of private and public sector jobs. We were just behind construction. Even during our tough times we were creating jobs.
We ask our members to look at the economy. We meet with the bank governor, Finance, and premiers because our members are the canaries in the mine shaft. With 18 million visits a day, they know what's going on in the economy, and 80% are saying that in the next six months they're going to maintain or increase their employment.
We asked them what their most important issues were. Seventy per cent of their costs are food and labour. Those are the issues, but I want to point out that a third said that a shortage of skilled labour is a concern for them—it depends which region—and another 28% said it was a shortage of unskilled labour.
We are anticipating a labour shortage and we are feeling it in some regions. We can do statistics and data and we strongly recommend we need better labour market information, but you can see we're facing a skill shortage and many of our members are feeling it now.
Mr. Chair, in conclusion, we're a significant employer in every community, and we have a key role with youth employment and first-time jobs.
We have a shortage of skilled labour issue. It's becoming a growing issue. We strongly support and need a federal-provincial private sector strategy to deal with future labour shortages, and government policy should enhance and not stifle restaurant growth.
Thank you, Mr. Chair.
:
Thank you, Mr. Chair. Thank you, committee members.
[Translation]
I will continue in French.
I would like to quickly tell you about a study published in the spring by the Institut de recherche et d'informations socio-écononiques. The study was an attempt to understand the current economic recovery by comparing it to the country's past recoveries in the wake of the last three major recessions—in 1975, in 1980 and in 1990.
The idea was to take up a hypothesis established by the IMF about a year and a half ago, whereby there is a major difference in the way the recovery is unfolding today. I worked with that hypothesis in 2008. In 2009, I published an article in the journal Options politiques regarding the notion of an L-shaped recovery, rather than a V-shaped or a U-shaped recovery.
That idea of an L-shaped recovery refers to an interpretation that I will present to you—an interpretation involving stagnant structural forces in the economy. I think it's very important to keep that context in mind in order to understand how the budgetary policy will behave. I will only talk to you about the diagnosis, leaving it to others to deduce from that policies moving in one direction or another. I would like to point out that this interpretation is similar to the one Larry Summers just presented to the IMF last week, and to Paul Krugman's interpretation. It is starting to make its way through the mainstream circles. However, when I started working on this, people looked at me in disbelief.
One of the tables illustrates the performance of the Canadian economy. The figure of 100—which stands for 100%—shows where the economy was just before the recession began. You can see two curves in the chart. The first one represents the average of recoveries since 1975, and the second one represents the current situation.
You can see that the performance of our economy is weak, that the economy is having difficulty recovering from the crisis and that we are going through a “non-recovery” or an extremely weak recovery, without experiencing a double-dip. How can that be explained? We can come back to the explanation later, but one thing is clear—ours in an open economy that is highly dependent on the global market. The U.S. finds itself much deeper than us in that stagnant crisis, but we are still affected.
How has the state reacted to that crisis? When we consider all the public spending, at all levels of government in Canada, we can clearly note a major difference in the way the state is handling the crisis. This means that the level of spending is significantly lower. In addition, as of the third year, we see that the state's impact has been neutral—that is, the spending stopped progressing and has been stagnant. So this is a new way to react to a crisis—instead of stimulating the economy, the government decided to apply policies characterized by austerity that neutralize the state's impact.
Let's now look at federal transfers. The 1990s were marked by major reforms implemented by Paul Martin. You can see that the federal government's impact on the economy was very neutral. In fact, the major economic stabilizers we have had in the past—such as transfers to provinces and municipalities, employment insurance, and so on—have not had an impact and were not triggered by the recession. The remaining tools consist of discretionary spending, whereby a decision is made in the budget to increase spending on infrastructure or ongoing expenses.
You can see that in this curve. Year 0 is the year of the recession. The figure “minus one” is my starting point. You can see that there is only the countercyclical curve, which represents government investments. Yet that accounts for only 4% of the GDP. The leveraging effect is very weak because, unfortunately, our tool has very little control over the economy. Household consumption expenditures, as we know, make up most of the Canadian economy. They accounted for 56% of the GDP in 2012.
I want to draw your attention to the following: we can see that the export sector has really dragged the economy down, but we are not just talking about the export sector, as investments and companies also have a major impact. Household consumption expenditures appear to be stable.
The last issue I wanted to discuss with you is somewhat worrisome. The following three curves should be considered: consumer credit as a total volume, expenditures and household income. You can see that, until the crisis, the expenditures and household income were in line with one another....
The Chair: You have 30 seconds left.
Mr. Éric Pineault: ... and that the credit is above. You see that, since the crisis, the income has been the floor, and the expenditures have been maintained thanks to an increase in consumer credit. That's not sustainable.
:
Mr. Chair, members of the committee, thank you very much for inviting Unifor to your hearings.
We agree with the supposition of the meeting that economic growth and job creation are the central goals and should be the central goals of a federal budget policy.
Unifor is Canada's largest trade union in the private sector of the economy. We represent over 300,000 members in over 20 different sectors. We were formed earlier this year through the merger of the former Canadian Auto Workers and the Communications, Energy and Paper Workers. I do want to recognize my colleague with me today, Dave Moffat, assistant to the president of Unifor and the top negotiator and official in charge of our energy, communications, and media sectors.
I must make one note regarding process. I know that in addition to these pre-budget hearings your committee is also investigating the current budget implementation bill, Bill . Representatives from Unifor will appear before you next week to express our views on certain aspects of that legislation, but we do want to register as an organization our concerns regarding the process by which these budget omnibus bills, such as C-4, are being used to change far-flung pieces of legislation that have no direct relation to a budget bill. In our judgment, some of the issues tackled by your committee through the C-4 hearings should be considered more directly and fulsomely through a normal legislative process.
On the issue at hand about economic growth and job creation, we have a written submission that has been distributed. Let me briefly highlight four points from the written document, and I refer you to the document for more details.
First of all, in terms of the status of Canada's overall labour market, it is often claimed that our labour market has done very well, sometimes supported by discussion about absolute increase in employment or percentage growth in employment. That is not the best way to measure labour market performance either over time or across countries, for the simple reason that we also have to take into account growth in the working age population, which is the pool of workers who are available for those jobs. A better measure is the employment rate, which considers the level of employment relative to growth and labour in the working-age population, which is relatively rapid in Canada's case. We have one of the fastest rates of population growth in the developed world.
In that regard, I'll refer you to figure 1 at the end of our brief, which shows the evolution of the employment rate in Canada since the years before the recession to present. As the recession hit, the employment rate fell rapidly, by 2.5 percentage points of the working-age population. That was the most dramatic and rapid decline in the employment rate since the 1930s. With the initial stimulus effort, fiscal and monetary interventions and other measures, that recuperated in the first year and a half of the recovery by about half of a percentage point, or about one-fifth of the way back. What's very important to note, though, is that since late 2010, for three years now, there's been no increase in the employment rate at all, so from a jobs market perspective relative to our population growth, the recovery has completely stalled. This picture is in fact a perfect L. In regard to my colleague's presentation recently about an L-shaped recovery, this is a perfect L. The only reason the unemployment rate has declined gradually over the last three years is the decline in labour force participation, which is nothing to be proud of.
I'll also refer you to table 1 at the back of the brief, which compares Canada's performance in the employment rate to the other industrialized countries of the world. Again, if we adjust for the differential population growth rates in different countries, Canada does not rank at the top, or even near the top. We rank 20th out of 34 countries in terms of the change in the employment rate from 2008, when the recession hit, to 2012 most recently. This shows that the argument of our labour market problem being one of a mismatch between available workers and available jobs, or certainly a shortage of workers or even a shortage of skills workers, is quite misplaced. That is a misdiagnosis of the problem and could lead to incorrect policy responses, including some of the measures the federal government has taken clearly aimed at trying to push a labour supply, whether that's temporary migrants, or changes to the EI rules, or other measures. In fact, I would argue there are over 20 unemployed Canadians effectively for every available job vacancy.
The general thrust of fiscal policy should be to address the main problem in the job market, which is a lack of jobs. So it's job creation and an expansionary program, and we have five dimensions of that written in the brief. In general, I think the continued emphasis on fiscal austerity, which has been indicated by the finance minister, is quite misplaced. We will balance the budget a year early; we will underspend our budgets in several key areas; and then we will further decline program spending relative to GDP in the years even after a balanced budget.
That is a very hollow victory at a moment when over two million Canadians are effectively unemployed. I think the continuing decline in program spending as a share of GDP after the balanced budget has been attained will reduce our GDP growth by up to half a point of GDP a year. I think that continuing austerity is both unnecessary and counterproductive.
Thank you for having us.
:
Thank you very much. I'm very happy to be here.
In addition to my work as an economist for the United Steelworkers union, I also serve as the volunteer chair of an organization called the Progressive Economics Forum, which has about 200 members across Canada. I'm very proud of the fact that four of those members are sitting in front of you on this panel. Angella, Eric, and Jim are also members of the PEF. Typically we hold sessions at the Canadian Economics Association meetings, and I'm very pleased that we're able to hold a session at the House of Commons finance committee.
A positive aspect of having these other eminent economists on the panel is that you already have a good overview of the labour market, fiscal policy, and the Canadian economy. What I want to do is focus a little more specifically on the question of whether corporate income tax cuts have helped create jobs by spurring investment.
In that vein, I would refer you to the document we provided you entitled, “Have Corporate Tax Cuts Increased Investment and Employment?”. It shows that the federal corporate tax rate, as we all know, has basically been cut in half since the year 2000. It's gone from just over 29% down to 15% today. It's quite a dramatic corporate income tax cut.
After-tax corporate profits as a share of gross domestic product have increased quite dramatically over that period of time. It started out at a little below 10% in 2000 and it's now up to about 14% of gross domestic product. That has been caused by an increase in pre-tax corporate profits, by a reduction in the federal corporate income tax rate, and by corporate tax cuts at the provincial level.
We've seen this huge drop in the corporate tax rate and a huge increase in after-tax profits. One would hope that would have led to a pretty impressive increase in business investment. That prompts the question of how we should measure investment. Often the way we measure business investment in the economy is to look at non-residential structures, machinery and equipment as a component of expenditure-based GDP.
I think that is a decent proxy for what we're trying to look at, but the problem is that it includes some investment in non-residential structures, machinery, and equipment by non-corporate entities, and it also excludes some residential investment by corporations.
I looked at Statistics Canada's financial flow accounts in order to zero in on the corporate sector. Business investment by the corporate sector as a share of gross domestic product has been pretty flat. Actually, in most years it's been lower than it was back in 2000 when these corporate tax cuts began.
It's not a particularly encouraging picture and it's even weaker when you compare it with after-tax profits as a share of the economy. In 2000 when this process started, corporate investment was actually bigger as a share of GDP than after-tax profits. That's exactly what you'd expect if you look at—
Yes?
The Chair: You have five minutes.
Mr. Erin Weir: Thank you very much.
—an economic textbook. Companies would borrow money to finance investment over and above their profits. That relationship has flipped around. More recently you can see that after-tax profits are quite a bit larger than investment. It's actually even worse than that, because of course, this business investment includes investment to cover depreciation, whereas the profits are net of depreciation, so there's actually even a bigger imbalance going on here.
The final point I want to make is that this overall corporate sector actually includes crown corporations, which is the next line on that table. While investment by crown corporations is very small as a share of GDP, it's actually increased by quite a large proportion. It's basically doubled since 2000. I think one of the untold stories of the great recession is how crown corporations were actually a stabilizing force to our economy.
When you take crown corporations out of it and you look at private corporations, the ones that are actually subject to the corporate tax rate and which might have benefited from these corporate tax cuts, what you see is an even clearer pattern of business investment actually having declined as a share of the economy as these corporate tax cuts were happening.
Thanks very much.
:
There was initial fiscal stimulus in Canada from the federal and provincial levels of government and that was quite appropriate. In the initial period of that post-recession turnaround, we did start to make progress. We were creating jobs faster than the population was growing. During the two years roughly of that proactive stimulus, I think we genuinely were recovering.
Since late 2010, however, governments at the federal level and in many provinces have emphasized austerity rather than recovery, so the foot is definitely on the brake on the fiscal side. Is the monetary foot on the gas? To some extent it is, but remember the Bank of Canada increased their interest rates before other central banks did. It could be argued that in fact they did so prematurely.
Certainly the fiscal foot is firmly on the brake, and given our poor labour market recovery, our stagnant growth, and the lack of positive momentum from other sectors of the economy, exports, business investments, and soon I suspect the housing sector, that's where the importance of not having a fiscal foot on the brake becomes all the more apparent.
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My colleague, Mr. Pineault, highlighted the different sources of economic weakness, business investment. Mr. Weir did the same. Mr. Pineault also mentioned the very poor trade performance.
Our exports have been stagnant. In fact, they've fallen back to a level equivalent to where they were in the year 2000, and our imports have grown much more. We do have a current account deficit in Canada. It's about $60 billion a year. I would argue that's more significant than a budget deficit, primarily because it shows flagging competitiveness in world markets, and every dollar of that in one way or another translates into increased indebtedness to the rest of the world.
Our budget deficit, on the other hand, first of all is much smaller. Second, the federal debt as a share of GDP, which is the more appropriate measure of the level of indebtedness, is already falling and is at rather modest levels. I think we should pay more attention to some of those other sources of weakness and less attention to balancing the budget as fast as possible, which I wouldn't even view as an appropriate goal at this junction.
Thanks to all of you for being here this afternoon. It's nice to see many of you again.
I have a couple of questions for a number of members on the panel.
First of all, I want to begin with something that I heard and which I just have a little difficulty accepting.
Mr. Stanford, first of all, how many job vacancies are there in Canada currently?
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No, I'm satisfied with the answer. This is my time. I'm satisfied with the answer.
Yesterday we had the president of CUPE, Paul Moist, in. I asked him if his trade union was a for-profit organization, and he claimed that it is not. I asked him what appears on the financial statements, if there is a profit showing, and he said no. This is my mistake. I should have checked the statements before. He said they appear on his website. It does show that CUPE made a profit of $11 million last year, not to mention $100 million in investments.
Now, my understanding is, and I think we would all agree in this room, that everybody should be paying their fair share of taxes. Businesses certainly do. It's odd to me that trade unions that make money, that make a profit, do not pay taxes.
Ms. MacEwen, would you agree with that? Do you think trade unions that make a profit should be paying their fair share of taxes?
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It's critically important. We're critically important in every community. If you compare Detroit versus another city, Detroit is gutted. They need a restaurant sector. We are the number one employer of first-time jobs, and we're number two for youth employment. A lot of those people go on to other careers everywhere.
I've got to say, instead of fighting around here, we really should be.... It's a non-partisan issue. I do think we need better labour market information, because somehow people forget about demographics.
The worst time to plan for a crisis is during a crisis. We collectively need to talk about this, all of us. We can try to one-up each other, but we have an issue coming at us, and we're feeling it. We're feeling it. The demographic cohort that's declining, that's the younger folks. We need to look at all strategies to deal with this.
To go back to your question, certainty is really important to us, and you've provided certainty. Certainty that payroll taxes won't increase when you're labour intensive is important. When you invest in the community and you're a smaller business, it's really, really important. When you're making decisions to expand, it's important, but so is the labour force, and it hurts expansion when you don't feel you can get that labour force. A lot of the skilled jobs we have lose out if we don't have the unskilled jobs.
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Thank you very much, Madam Chair.
Witnesses, thanks very much.
Mr. Whyte, you're saying that we have to prepare, and I agree wholeheartedly. It's like this skills shortage, perceived anyway, is hitting us like a runaway van.
For example, in terms of the people you represent, have you seen an increase in spending on skills development and training? Can you measure a noted increase in training for your sector?
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Yes and no. Yesterday we had a meeting with the employment commissioner, and we had 24 groups, associations, around the table. All of them said that they feel the crisis coming. Then we talked about measurement of training. They were using the Conference Board and the OECD study that said Canada's not training as much as they should.
Then we asked this question.... This is a 10-year, 20-year problem that we continually let happen. All we measure is formal training. There are examples of where companies will be declining and they can get recognition for formal training as they're declining, but we don't measure informal training. That's the highest level of training.
I'll ask every one of the MPs around here, how much formal training have you had? Have you grown in experience? Absolutely.
That's informal training, and we need to track that.
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I don't mean to cut you off—I appreciate that answer—but we only have five minutes.
This question is probably for the CLC, but anybody else can answer this if they want.
You mentioned the minister's comments about having more skin in the game. I agree with you 100% on that, and I agree with the minister's comments on it. You know, with the jobs grant, if he would have brought new money to that program, I would have bought on and I would have been a cheerleader for that program.
What's the CLC's position on how this is being presented? Taking the money from the LMAs, how's that going to impact? We're hearing it from the provinces. Does CLC have a position on this?
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You made sure we got that qualifier at the end of your comments.
On the employment rate, Mr. Stanford, you say that's the key part. The decline in the labour force participation is key. With EI rates going down, we're seeing, I think, even more people not being eligible to receive EI benefits.
I asked the last panel this, and perhaps I can get your comments on it. We're seeing 72% more Canadians working for minimum wage, so they're almost living in poverty. With two million unemployed, is there a measurement out there of those who are underemployed? Is there a measurement out there of those working so close to the line as to being close to living in poverty?
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—with 80,000 workers. Congratulations on that. I know that was a big coup for you.
You have a large number of union members in Alberta. I like to say that I represent more union members than anybody else in the House of Commons, more than probably all of them combined, I'd like to say, but I know that's not true.
I just know there are a lot of union members up there, because I was one once and most of my family have been. It's very important to union members in relation to the continuation of the oil sands and the oil sector generally. That's why I want to talk a little bit to Ms. Kenny specifically.
I do want to say, Mr. Whyte, that I was very impressed with something you said. I think it illustrates what's going on in Fort McMurray and generally across the busy places in Canada, which is that skilled jobs cannot be there without unskilled jobs to support them. I can't tell you how true that is in Fort McMurray. We have hotel rooms and hotel floors that close, restaurants that close Mondays, Fridays and Saturdays because people can't get employees, so what happens? Nobody goes there. We can't get skilled workers to come because the quality of life is so bad.
Ms. Kenny, can we talk just briefly about pipelines? I'm a big believer in pipelines, because I see 500 or 600 train cars going to Vancouver, crossing over roads. That's six or seven separate cars. I know they were having problems back in the 1990s and in the early 2000s with trains. Now we have more trains full of oil going down there than ever before. We all know what happens if those trains are not treated properly and the safety aspects are not taken into consideration.
We also have a lot of trucks. I understand there are about 110 to 120 trucks a day that go to Vancouver airport with jet fuel, because we have no capacity to do that in Canada; they're coming from the United States. We're discounting our oil by $30 million to $50 million a day, which by my calculation is for sure somewhere around a new school every day in Canada that we could afford to build if we had pipeline capacity to the west coast.
Can we talk about how great pipelines are compared to trucks and rail for Canadians?
We don't have a lot of time, but I know you could spend a long time on it.
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Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
I want to thank all our witnesses for joining us.
Mr. Stanford, in his essay, “The Price of Inequality”, economist Joseph Stiglitz discussed the issue of young people entering the workforce during a crisis and the ensuing difficulties. I would call that a gap in employment integration of young people. Once they face the initial difficulties of entering the labour market, those problems accumulate, and it becomes very difficult, if not impossible, to remedy the situation.
Could you tell us a bit about that problem in Canada currently?
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In my submission, I haven't pulled out the numbers on youth unemployment or youth labour market participation specifically, but that research is readily available. I know my colleague, Ms. MacEwen, has done a lot in her work. She might like to comment.
The lasting effects of non-participation and non-employment by young people are very severe for them, for their families, and for their communities. Even their lifetime earnings can be negatively affected because even if they do eventually get a job and start working their way up the ladder, they have had a five-year delay before they start to get the earnings that would normally come with experience.
The international evidence, even from fields like criminology or health studies, shows that type of disengagement from society, the isolation, as well as the poverty, has tremendous long-term impacts not just on those affected but on all of society.
Mr. Pineault, during our study on inequalities, Toronto-Dominion Bank's Chief Economist, Craig Alexander, talked about the conclusions drawn by Michael Wolfson, professor at the University of Ottawa, regarding the 0.01% of the population that had increased their income drastically in some 15 years.
In your study, you said that there was an ever-widening gap. In relation to that, let's recall the Gini coefficient, which broke in the 1990s as a result of the Chrétien government's actions. Could you comment on the fact that the vast majority of Canadians are no longer participating in economic activity or recovery?
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What this study is trying to show is that there are two recoveries—one of which is a real economic recovery that is very weak and trapped in stagnation. Everyone—be they business people or workers attached to that economy—sees their income stagnate. They have a rising amount of debt that is not sustainable. That's the first part of the story. The debt I am talking about is not related to homes. I am not talking about real estate debt.
Let's now talk about the other part of the story. The financial economy is doing great, interest rates are very low and banks have recovered very quickly. The situation is great for everyone whose income is attached to that financial economy. You can see that most of the growth is headed in that direction. The bit of growth and the profit rate Erin was talking about earlier transform into financial income.
So if you depend on a financial rent in one form or another—stock options, dividends, capital gains, investments, and so on—you will be doing very well. Unfortunately, most Canadians live off their income. The figure of 0.01% represents people who live off that financial economy, and they are doing very well. The implemented tax policies helped them because their income is not taxed in the same way. As you know, $1 of income translates to $1 in taxes, while $1 of capital gains means $0.50 or $0.75 in taxes, depending on where it comes from.
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Mr. Chair, I have the good news that I'll be sharing my time with you since you've been such a good chair today.
My first question is for Garth Whyte, president and CEO of the Canadian Restaurant and Foodservices Association. Thank you, Mr. Whyte, for being here today.
Our government has been focused on job creation. I think it has proven to be very successful, given that we have the best job creation record in the G-7 with over a million net new jobs created since the recession in 2009. I would like to ask you how freezing EI premiums and extending the hiring credit, which is designed to help employers to create jobs and hire more employees, especially small business, has helped your industry.
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It helps to a significant amount. Many times our members feel like it's death by a thousand cuts, and nothing is more frustrating than to have a tax on payroll. That's what EI can turn into.
I'll digress a bit. I came prepared to talk about employment, and I could talk about deficits. I could talk about the provincial debt, which no one is talking about here, but it's the aggregate debt that's really important.
I could talk about when I worked in finance in Saskatchewan, the founding province of health care, and the founding party had a triple-B credit rating and had to cut health care. Deficits are not compassionate. Deficits aren't how you get out of things. You need to have some balance, and I think we've had some, but there has been a very uncertain recovery. I totally agree with that. The worst thing you can do is create uncertainty, With the freezing of EI premiums, that helps create certainty. It helps us significantly.
By not increasing debt at least federally, it helps us. Provincially, a huge debt load is starting to run. It creates a lot of uncertainty. You can see growth in different provinces differently, and that's why.
Even municipally, we've had some people...they invest across the country, some of our larger members. There are certain cities where they've said they can't invest there. Why? They're afraid. They're afraid what the next tax level is going to be. They're afraid about what regulations they're going to face. They're concerned about the labour force. So they're going to go over here. Those are decisions that are being made.
Meanwhile, the other half of our members are small independents who stick in their local communities and they get hurt.
We need to have this balanced. The certainty that you've helped put in place, I think is very important.
I'll follow up from Mr. Saxton.
Ms. MacEwen, you referenced the TD report on jobs, which is a very good report. This report says that Canada's job record over the past decade has been robust, especially relative to other G-7 countries. I think we should get it on the record that the report recognizes that. Also, the report very much agrees with what a number of you are saying, that governments cannot act alone. Employers, educators, and employees need to join the fray.
I appreciate your support for what has said. I heard your comments in response to Mr. Cuzner that you'd support the concept of the Canada job grant if it was new additional money. I like the model of having the federal government, the provincial government, employers, and labour unions with skin in the game to ensure that people get training so that there is not a jobs mismatch at the end.
I have to say as someone who comes from Edmonton—Leduc that there is a labour shortage in my riding. I'd be happy to host any of you out there in Nisku. We could drive around and visit companies like Tenaris in the steel industry that is operating at two-thirds capacity because they cannot find people. They ask me, “James, do you know anyone who will work a shift here in the steel industry? We need people. Do you know anyone? Do you have any resumés for us?” That's simply the reality in my area.
I take issue with some of the comments in the TD report. I'm showing I'm being fair: I disagree with labour unions and with bank economists as well. I wanted you to comment on that.
Mr. Whyte, I wanted you to comment on the Canada job grant that the government has proposed. I'd like to know how you think it should be implemented and whether you support it.
Ms. MacEwen and then Mr. Whyte.
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Thank you, Chair, and my thanks to everyone for being here.
My first questions are for Ms. Kenny of the Canadian Energy Pipeline Association. You refer in your brief to the Canadian Pipeline Technology Collaborative and the CEPA Foundation as well as the objective of increasing collaboration for research and development, which I think is a great thing.
In July 2010, the Kalamazoo spill from a pipeline operated by Enbridge constituted the largest on-land oil spill and one of the costliest oil spills in history. The pipeline carried bitumen from the oil sands. The bitumen sank and the EPA fined the Enbridge company $3.7 million for 22 violations. One of the problems the National Transportation Safety Board investigation pointed out, Ms. Kenny, was the corrosion fatigue of the pipeline as a consequence of carrying dilbit and heavy bitumen. That was what they said was one of the key factors in a cleanup that cost $767 million U.S..
Does your association or the Pipeline Technology Collaborative you referenced study that aspect of it, the corrosion fatigue of pipelines carrying bitumen?
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We have a very active climate change working group, with respect to our own operations. Oil pipelines generally use electric pumps and therefore, in and of themselves are zero emitting. Natural gas pipelines use gas-fired compressors. We're looking for ways to run those more efficiently, and also to do waste heat recovery and other technologies.
I would just add, though, that on a global level, I personally do believe in climate change. I'm active personally on the board, for example, of the Climate Change and Emissions Management Corporation in Alberta, which is where the carbon levy funds $1.3 billion of technology projects.
I think in Canada we do need to recognize that from the oil sands, for example, we are producing just 0.15% of global emissions overall. The World Energy Council recently concluded its conference in Korea. I think that the closing statements from all global energy and environment leaders were very profound about the need to really address the global issues directly.
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That's not what I asked you, but that's fine.
It's a question of time here. We have five minutes for questions and a lot of questions to get out.
This is for the Canadian restaurant association. Mr. Whyte, you made a couple of statements that I want to pick up on. I want to engage the rest of the group on it. This is not about being a union member or not being a union member, but the many gateway jobs. This is the first job that a lot of young people, especially in more urban settings, will have. I live in a rural setting and there are jobs for young people and sometimes young people don't fill them. Sometimes that's a problem with the family. They don't think they need to do that job and they can get a better one somehow. I think it's a real, serious, and growing problem.
Mr. Stanford made a statement on that at the same time, and I can't find it right now, but it was to the same idea that we're not getting these young people to fill the jobs, so we have a job shortage, I believe, an employment shortage in the country. We have people to fill those jobs. Do we have to start over on the equation? Is it an educational process? Is it a societal process? We've gone wrong, but where have we gone wrong?
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I think the answer is yes. We need to corral all of us here. It's provincial and federal. It's education, training. It's EI. It's immigration. We have to look at a whole menu of strategies.
As far as youth employment is concerned, it is double. The 15-to-24 cohort unemployment rate is higher. Part of it is matching the jobs through the schools. I do know that colleges, the culinary schools, have line-ups to get in there. We have to figure out how to deal with this. I have metrics, but I also have three kids. I have to push them sometimes to get that first job.
Then we talk about, well, should someone who has never had a job, who doesn't know anything get top dollar. No. They are being trained. They have to be trained. There's a huge benefit, and they'll tell you this, and you'll tell us this. One out of three Canadians worked in a restaurant at some point in time. It's a great opportunity and I think we should leverage that opportunity.
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Thank you very much, Mr. Thibeault.
Colleagues, I know question period is starting, so if you have to go. I'll just remind you that there are no motions but I did want to finish.
Mr. Whyte, I want you to address the questions that I posed. On the labour shortage issue, unless your members and other members and other companies like Tenaris in the steel sector or PCL or others are saying things to me that are completely false, there is a massive labour shortage in my area and in Alberta. In terms of wages, these are companies that are not paying low wages and benefits. Frankly, many of the employers are finding housing for people who are working for them. Can you address that issue?